I was recently reading a forum thread in Gear
Slutz about which movies have the best sound effects. There were a few shared responses, and one of
those was The Matrix (1999). First off, let me say that this is one of my
top favorite movies. The concept, the
graphics, the settings, and the sound were just stellar for the time, and even
now. Reading that people believed The
Matrix had great audio gave me an excuse to watch it for about the hundredth
time to do “research” for this blog.
Before I get into the audio, let me inform you readers that I DO NOT
have surround sound. The judgment of
this audio is based off of my 2.1 system.

If you have seen the movie, you know everything action in
the movie is digitally and electronically based (I don’t mean the way it was
made, I mean the fact that the Matrix itself is a computer world.) Also, everything action of the characters is
based off of speed. The audio reflects
this very well! There are TONS of
whooshes and electrical sounds throughout the movie. As you no doubt have guessed, I think Dane A. Davis did an amazing job
as the sound designer for this movie.

There are a great amount of large sound effects in this
movie such as the huge electric hover pads of the Nebuchadnezzar. These
were actually made by taking a six-foot Jacob’s ladder and running 60,000 volts
of electricity through it. Sounds like
this, and the wicked sound of Neo’s voice being digitalized as the liquid mirror consumes his body, are some excellent
sound designing.

This movie was actually the first movie that I noticed
little actions sounding louder than normal as well. For instance, when someone would take off
sunglasses, or when Neo took the red pill from Morpheus’s hand, you could
clearly hear a “tap” as the character’s fingers touched those objects. There was obviously quite a bit of foley for
this movie!

When the Sentinels were first seen, there was an eerie digitally
horrifying sound about them. Dane A.
Davis mentioned that those machines were a combination of fifteen raw sounds
mixed together including screams, screeching bearings, and ratchets digitally altered
with effects like pitch shifting.

It’s really amazing all of the work that goes into the audio
of movies. I really cannot justify the
work of Dane A. Davis in my words, so if you would like to hear it directly
from him, please take a look at this article
from 1998 where Dan A. Davis explains it all.
Click here
to read it.

Now, I keep saying the full name “Dane A. Davis”, because when
I want to talk about the emotion evoking music from The Matrix, this was the work
of the amazingly talented Don Davis. As writing this, I am listening to the soundtrack
of The Matrix, and all I can say is “wow”.
I love movie soundtracks in general, but it’s works like this that just
blow me away. That same “electrical”
aspect of the movie can be heard with the screeching of stringed
instruments. The deep drums and high
pitched horns add to the mystery and suspense of the film. If you are unsure what I mean, then listen to
“Anything Is Possible” which I have embedded below.

The Matrix: a visually stunning and auditory stimulating
film that will be a classic for the rest of time. A movie that has spawned countless spin-offs, products such as action figures and toys, cartoons, and much more. A movie that has gone down in history as a must see, and a must hear.